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http://importantbankingnews.blogspot.in/2013/02/banking-for-braveheart.html
It is more relevant at an economy's macro level to address issues such as systemic risk, market discipline, liquidity and transparency in the risk-management framework. It is interesting to note that though risk capital may be the necessary safety cushion for banks, capital alone may not be sufficient to protect them from any extreme unexpected loss events. In reality, risk capital will remain only a number and may not be effective if banks do not assess their risk periodically and take timely corrective action when the risk exceeds the threshold limit. Thus, whether it is Basel II or Basel III, it is crucial that a bank does not depend solely on "regulatory capital". What is needed is a dynamic risk mitigation strategy, where all employees act as risk managers in their own area. A proper risk culture needs to be developed across the organisation and " risk" should be an input for future business decision-making. Risk management should not merely be an activity to comply with regulatory requirements.
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http://importantbankingnews.blogspot.in/2013/02/basle-iii-burden-on-banks.html
The overall bad loan burden of the Indian banking industry has risen sharply in the past one year. Gross NPAs of 40 listed banks rose 46.85% to Rs.1.67 trillion in the September quarter from Rs.1.14 trillion in the year-ago period.
SBI had bad loans equivalent to 5.15% of the total loan book in September 2012. Central Bank of India (5.64% in December), UCO Bank (5.53% in December) and PNB (4.61% in December) are other lenders that have reported a significant rise in bad loans.
The banking industry is witnessing a sharp increase in restructured assets, which have reached about Rs.4 trillion, and analysts estimate that 25-30% of these loans may turn bad.
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http://importantbankingnews.blogspot.in/2013/02/npa-rises-also-in-overseas-branches-of.html
Even if loan accounts became bad , such bad accounts were not considered bad by bankers during last ten years . It was the habit of top bankers to punish officers who insisted for treating bad loan accounts as Non Performing asset as per prevalent RBI prudential norms for recognition of income and for classification of assets. Officers not listening to oral advice of top bankers to treat even bad asset as Standard assets were transferred to most critical place and never promoted in promotion processes. Many senior officials have lost the hope of good career in banks and passing their bad days somehow or the other.
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http://dkjain497091112006.blogspot.in/2013/02/are-banks-really-safe.html
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